West Haven’s mix of residential neighborhoods and busy daily traffic can create real-world security gaps. Cases often start with situations like:
- Parking lot and access issues: poor lighting, broken/ineffective gates, doors that don’t latch, or “after-hours” access that isn’t controlled.
- Multi-unit building breakdowns: malfunctioning key fobs, doors left unsecured, missing camera coverage in entry corridors, or inadequate response after reports of suspicious activity.
- Pedestrian-heavy areas: injuries that occur where people are walking to vehicles, waiting near entrances, or using shared paths—especially when property layouts make it easy for an attacker to approach undetected.
- Construction or contractor work zones: when temporary fencing, signage, or controlled access isn’t maintained, creating opportunities for harm.
In these situations, the question usually isn’t “could the owner have prevented every crime?” It’s whether the property’s safety measures were reasonable for the risks the owner knew—or should have known.


